Friday, September 9, 2016

James 4:17 declares, "Anyone, then, who knows the good he ought to do
and doesn't do it, sins." A sin of omission is a sin that is the result
of not doing something God’s Word teaches that we should do. It is generally used in contrast with the corresponding phrase “the sin of commission,”
or sins that a person actively commits. Paul juxtaposes the two
concepts in Romans 7:14-20. He decries his tendency toward both types of
sin. He does what he doesn’t want to do and knows is wrong—the sin of
commission—and he doesn’t do what he knows he should do and really wants
to do—the sin of omission. Here is a picture of the new nature in
conflict with the flesh in which it dwells.

In the New Testament, the classic example given by Jesus is the account
of the Good Samaritan. After a man had been beaten and left in need of
help, the first two men to pass by—a priest and a Levite, both of whom
knew better—failed to act. The third man, a Samaritan, stopped to show
compassion to the man in need (Luke 10:30-37). Jesus used this example
to teach that we are to likewise help those in need. By doing so, he
clearly communicated that it is sinful to avoid doing good, just as it
is sinful to pursue what is evil.

Jesus further describes the sins of omission in the parable of the sheep
and the goats in Matthew 25:31-46. The goats, those who are sent away
by Christ, are those who saw others hungry and thirsty, but did not
provide food and water. They are those who saw others in need of
clothing, who were sick or in jail but did nothing to clothe or comfort
them. These are all examples of sins of omission. There was no sin
committed against these needy people—they were not intentionally starved
or deprived of their clothing. But the sin of omission was committed
when those who could have provided for them chose not to.

Finally, the apostle Paul provides a summary statement that explains why
we should do what is right and refrain from sins of omission: “Let us
not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a
harvest if we do not give up” (Galatians 6:9). When we do the will of
our heavenly Father (Matthew 12:50), we avoid sins of omission and live
productive, fruitful lives pleasing to God (Romans 12:1-2).

Friday, September 2, 2016

Everyone seeks freedom. Especially in the West, freedom is the highest
virtue, and it is sought after by all who are, or consider themselves to
be, oppressed. But freedom in Christ is not the same as political or
economic freedom. In fact, some of the most harshly oppressed people in
history have had complete freedom in Christ. The Bible tells us that,
spiritually speaking, no one is free. In Romans 6, Paul explains that we
are all slaves. We are either slaves to sin or slaves to righteousness.
Those who are slaves to sin cannot free themselves from it, but once we
are freed from the penalty and power of sin through the cross, we
become a different kind of slave, and in that slavery we find complete
peace and true freedom.

Although it seems like a contradiction, the only true freedom in Christ
comes to those who are His slaves. Slavery has come to mean degradation,
hardship, and inequality. But the biblical paradigm is the true freedom
of the slave of Christ who experiences joy and peace, the products of
the only true freedom we will ever know in this life. There are 124
occurrences in the New Testament of the word doulos,
which means “someone who belongs to another” or “bondslave with no
ownership rights of his own.” Unfortunately, most modern Bible versions,
as well as the King James Version, most often translate doulos
as “servant” or “bond-servant.” But a servant is one who works for
wages, and who, by virtue of his work, is owed something from his
master. The Christian, on the other hand, has nothing to offer the Lord
in payment for his forgiveness, and he is totally owned by the Master
who bought him with His shed blood on the cross. Christians are
purchased by that blood and are the possession of their Lord and Savior.
We are not hired by Him; we belong to Him (Romans 8:9; 1 Corinthians
7:4). So “slave” is really the only proper translation of the word doulos.

Far from being oppressed, the slave of Christ is truly free. We have
been set free from sin by the Son of God who said, “If the Son sets you
free, you will be free indeed” (John 8:36). Now the Christian can truly
say, along with Paul, “Through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of
life set me free from the law of sin and death” (Romans 8:2). We now
know the truth and that truth has set us free (Romans 8:32).
Paradoxically, through our bondage to Christ, we have also become sons
and heirs of the Most High God (Galatians 4:1–7). As heirs, we are
partakers of that inheritance—eternal life—which God confers on all His
children. This is a privilege beyond any earthly treasure we could ever
inherit, while those in bondage to sin inherit only spiritual death and
an eternity in hell.

Why, then, do so many Christians live as though they are still in
bondage? For one thing, we often rebel against our Master, refusing to
obey Him and clinging to our old lives. We hold on to the sins that once
bound us to Satan as our master. Because our new nature still lives in
the old fleshly nature, we are still drawn to sin. Paul tells the
Ephesians to “put off” the old self with its deceit and corruption and
“put on” the new self with its righteousness. Put off lying, and put on
truthfulness. Put off stealing, and put on usefulness and work. Put off
bitterness, rage, and anger, and put on kindness, compassion, and
forgiveness (Ephesians 4:22–32). We have been set free from the bondage
of sin, but we often put the chains back on because part of us loves the
old life.

Furthermore, often we don’t realize that we have been crucified with
Christ (Galatians 2:20) and that we have been reborn as completely new
creatures (2 Corinthians 5:17). The Christian life is one of death to
self and rising to “walk in the newness of life” (Romans 6:4), and that
new life is characterized by thoughts about Him who saved us, not
thoughts about the dead flesh that has been crucified with Christ. When
we are continually thinking about ourselves and indulging the flesh in
sins we have been freed from, we are essentially carrying around a
corpse, full of rottenness and death. The only way to bury it fully is
by the power of the Spirit who is the only source of strength. We
strengthen the new nature by continually feeding on the Word of God, and
through prayer we obtain the power we need to escape the desire to
return to the old life of sin. Then we will realize that our new status
as slaves to Christ is the only true freedom, and we will call upon His
power to “not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its
evil desires” (Romans 6:12).